FINAL BILL REPORT

SHB 1724

This analysis was prepared by non-partisan legislative staff for the use of legislative members in their deliberations. This analysis is not a part of the legislation nor does it constitute a statement of legislative intent.

C 375 L 19

Synopsis as Enacted

Brief Description: Concerning the mitigation of public facilities in certain cities.

Sponsors: House Committee on Local Government (originally sponsored by Representative Santos).

House Committee on Local Government

Senate Committee on Local Government

Background:

Population.

The City of Seattle is the only city in the state with a population greater than 550,000, according to the most recent population estimates by the Office of Financial Management,

Community Reporting Areas.

The City of Seattle Office of Planning and Community Development established Community Reporting Areas (CRAs) as a standard citywide geography for the purpose of reporting census information. There are 53 CRAs composed from one to six census tracts.

Census tracts are used by the United States Census Bureau (Bureau) and established for the purpose of providing a stable set of geographic units for the presentation of statistical data. Census tracts are small statistical subdivisions of a county or equivalent entity that generally have a population size between 1,200 and 8,000 people. Census tracts are updated by local participants prior to each decennial census, but the Bureau determines census tracts in situations where no local participant exists or where state, local, or tribal governments decline to participate.

American Community Survey.

The American Community Survey (ACS) is a nationwide survey from the Bureau that is part of the Decennial Census Program. The ACS collects detailed information on demographic, socioeconomic, and housing characteristics of the population. The Bureau sends the ACS to a small percentage of the population on a rotating basis throughout the decade, but no household will receive the survey more often than once every five years. The Bureau combines the data over different time periods and publishes it in two different data sets as follows:

Summary:

A city with a population greater than 550,000 that permits a public facility to be constructed or operated by another entity (local government agency, transit authority, or public facility district) in a neighborhood with a high poverty level and a high rate of ethnic diversity must formally request that the entity that is constructing or is operating the facility to assess and mitigate the negative impacts that the public facility has had on the surrounding neighborhood.

A neighborhood has a high poverty level if 12 percent or more of the population is below the poverty level according to the most recent ACS five-year estimate. In addition, a neighborhood has a high rate of ethnic diversity if 40 percent or more of the population identifies as persons of color according to the most recent ACS five-year estimate. The CRA boundaries define the neighborhood boundaries.

The entity operating or constructing the public facility must: (1) consider the potential or actual disparate racial, social, and economic impacts of the public facility on nearby residents; and (2) develop a mitigation plan, including paying for the costs of any residential parking zone necessitated by the facility causing the impact. Residents of the impacted neighborhood must be kept whole for the costs of the mitigation plan. In addition, the entity may negotiate with other local jurisdictions who have a direct interest in having created the negative impacts, but the residents must be held harmless.

"Public facility" means a project that was completed by December 31, 2014.

Votes on Final Passage:

House

88

8

Senate

41

0

(Senate amended)

House

87

7

(House concurred)

Effective:

July 28, 2019